Search This Blog

Trizz - Static (Single Audio)

Inland Empire/Los Angeles Hip Hop artist Trizz, drops his new single "Static". Produced by OSYM, the track is taken from Trizz's upcoming ablum titled "The Attic".

Trizz adds "Everything is changing around me and things are starting to become a blur, causing static. Still I get through it and anybody in my way needs to move or will get ran over, period... or it will be static".

Trizz is preparing to release 2 new albums very soon, the first part "The Attic" as side A and the second part "The Basement" as side B

Comments

Post a Comment

Popular Posts

Canada's Kount and London's James Gent link up to drop off "The Sum" via BLVNT Records. While it is an instrumental track, it's just dripping with soul and speaks to me more than most lyrical laden songs do these days. It begins with some flighty plucks of the guitar accompanied by exploratory strokes of the ivories before erupting into a smorgasbord of only the grooviest synths backed by dense, clean drums falling in a classic hip hop pattern. The ghostly vocals elevate the tracks potential to evoke longing, but it feels like a more self-assured longing than a desperate one. It seems to be acknowledging a sense of seclusion while also inspiring hope for salvation from that seclusion. You can stream the track below or, if you feel so inspired, you can name your own price and get the download over at Bandcamp.

Russian language rap has existed since the late 80s when American hip-hop burrowed its way through the Iron Curtain on the backs of Adidas-clad Soviet b-boys. In the mid-90s, the first rap albums started to circulate around Russia on cassette tapes. Throughout the 90s and 2000s, Russian rap started to gain popularity with an Eastern European audience as well; however, until the mid 2000s, Russian rap more closely mirrored and borrowed from its American originator, producing beats heavily informed by both West Coast gangster rap and old school New York production. In the 2000s, electronic music took on a particularly important role in creating the sound of Russian rap. Electronic Dance Music (EDM) was already a very popular genre in Russia, but trap music was basically unknown. Trap music ended up being introduced to a Russian audience through its bastardized form, EDM. EDM was then mixed with Trap creating “trap EDM,” which in turn was what brought traditional Trap to Russia. As Andrew…

Hip-Hop has not traditionally thrived in St. John’s, Newfoundland, but for the individual members of ChessClub (Andrew Lahey, Matthew Murphy, James Piercey and producer Adrian Gagnon), who grew up there, hip-hop is how they found each other. The four piece now call Toronto home, and with fifteen years of collective writing, musings, and perhaps a few rebirths, ChessClub are all too ready to release their sophomore album, These Flowers Are For You.

In 2014 ChessClub premiered their first self-titled album with Vice magazine’s online music publication, Noisey, and earned themselves an East Cost Music Award (ECMA) nomination. The group are passionate about performing live, and often opt to perform alongside a full band. Throughout their career they have shared the stage with notable acts such as Pharoahe Monch, Shad, Camp Lo, Pete Rock and CL Smooth, The Beatnuts, Slaughterhouse, Belly and RA The Rugged Man.

ChessClub’s blend of traditional and contemporary style carries into These F…